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  • Pope boosts Armenia's efforts to have Ottoman killings recognised as

    Pope boosts Armenia's efforts to have Ottoman killings recognised as genocide

    Pope Francis delivers powerful message by recognising atrocities
    between 1915 and 1922 as genocide in speech at Vatican on eve of
    centenary

    Pope Francis and the head of Armenia's Orthodox church, Karekin II,
    greet each other during an Armenian-rite mass in St Peter's Basilica.
    Photograph: Gregorio Borgia/AP

    Ian Black in Yerevan and Rosie Scammell in Rome

    Sunday 12 April 2015 18.12 BST Last modified on Sunday 12 April 2015 20.02 BST


    Armenia's efforts to promote greater awareness of the massacre of 1.5
    million of its people by Turkey during the fall of the Ottoman empire
    were given a dramatic boost on Sunday by the pope's description of the
    atrocities as `the first genocide of the 20th century' ` days ahead of
    the centenary of the event.

    Pope Francis used a special mass in St Peter's Basilica to mark the
    anniversary, and referred to `three massive and unprecedented
    tragedies' of the last century.

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    `The first, which is widely considered the first genocide of the 20th
    century, struck your own Armenian people,' the pontiff said. `Bishops
    and priests, religious women and men, the elderly and even defenceless
    children and the infirm were murdered.'

    Historians estimate that as many as 1.5 million Armenians were killed
    in state-organised violence between 1915 and 1922. Russia, France and
    about 20 other countries recognise it as genocide.

    The US and Britain do not, however: most likely to avoid angering
    their Nato ally. The Turkish government rejects the term and
    emphasises wartime conditions, although in recent years it has
    acknowledged Armenian suffering.

    Turkey immediately summoned the papal ambassador to Ankara to express
    its displeasure and later recalled its ambassador from the Vatican.
    The foreign ministry said the pope had contradicted his message of
    peace and dialogue during a visit to Turkey in November.

    Expressing `great disappointment and sadness', it called the message
    discriminatory because it only mentioned the pain suffered by
    Christian Armenians, and not Muslims and other religious groups.

    The fate of the Armenians and impunity for their killers has come to
    be seen as foreshadowing the Nazi extermination of 6 million Jews 25
    years later. The concept of genocide was recognised by the UN in 1948.
    Armenia hopes wider international recognition will increase pressure
    on Turkey, though their relations are complicated by other factors,
    including the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over
    Nagorno-Karabakh.


    Pope Francis calls Armenian massacre `first genocide of 20th century'

    Strictly speaking, it was not the first such announcement. In 2001
    Pope John Paul II and Kerekin II, the leader of the Armenian Apostolic
    church, used identical language to that used by Pope Francis on
    Sunday. The original statement, however, was issued in Echmiadzin, the
    Armenian equivalent of the Vatican, rather than in Rome.

    Analysts said the timing was also highly significant, coming so close
    to the 24 April commemoration event in Yerevan and around the world.
    Turkey has infuriated Armenians by choosing to mark the centenary of
    the wartime Gallipoli landings on exactly the same date, a move
    deliberately designed to overshadow remembrance of the genocide.
    Gallipoli has never before been commemorated on that day.

    President Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an also ignored an invitation from the
    Armenian president, Serž Sargasyan, for him to come to Yerevan. The
    Armenian government is expected to welcome the statement when
    Sargasyan, who attended the mass, returns from Rome.

    `This is the first time a mass was dedicated to the Armenian genocide
    victims in St Peter's,' said commentator Ara Tadevosyan. `The pope's
    acknowledgement that ours was the first genocide of the 20th century
    is very important. It's another sign that the civilized world is
    accepting what happened to us despite all the pressure from Turkey.'

    The pontiff's decision to bracket the mass killing of Armenians with
    the crimes perpetrated by Nazism and Stalinism gives the Vatican's
    `highest sanction' to genocide recognition, said Theo van Lint, a
    professor of Armenian studies at the University of Oxford. `I think
    it's very important to realise he gave space to the leaders, the heads
    of the Armenian church and Armenian Catholics, to fully give their
    view of events. It's very clear that the pope accepts that it is a
    genocide.'

    The pope was joined by Kerekin II, Sargasyan and other dignitaries.
    Allowing Armenian leaders to speak in St Peter's Basilica was
    described as a `strategic move' by Van Lint.

    Igor Dorfmann-Lazarev, a researcher on Armenian history at the School
    of Oriental and African Studies (Soas) in London, said the ceremony
    also demonstrated the pope's efforts to put peripheral Christian
    groups at the centre of the Catholic church. `This is the first time
    that Armenia is the centre of attention of Catholic life and the
    Christian world,' he said. `It's meant to draw attention to the
    Christian east.'

    Pope Francis also declared a 10th-century Armenian monk, St Gregory of
    Narek, a `doctor of the church'. The mystic and poet is celebrated for
    his writings, some of which are still recited in Armenian churches.

    Britain will be represented at the Yerevan genocide centennial by the
    Conservative MP John Whittingdale, the chairman of the
    British-Armenian all-party group. The UK representation at the
    Gallipoli anniversary will be led by the Prince of Wales.

    The Associated Press in Ankara contributed to this report


    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/apr/12/pope-boosts-armenias-efforts-to-have-ottoman-killings-recognised-as-genocide

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